Trump ran for office denouncing the federal debt as dangerously high and asserting that he could pay it all off in eight years. Instead, his tax cuts, together with profligate military spending—far more than the Pentagon says it needs—are growing our government’s debt.

“If current laws generally remained unchanged, CBO projects, growing budget deficits would boost that debt sharply over the next 30 years,” the new report stated. “It would approach 100% of GDP by the end of the next decade and 152% by 2048. That amount would be the highest in the nation’s history by far.”

The most ominous part of the new CBO report examines how the individual tax cuts are, at least for the moment, temporary. They expire after seven years while the corporate tax cuts are permanent. The seven-year limit understated the real costs, as calculated using Congressional budgeting rules.

Assuming the individual cuts are extended for the full 10 years, the Trump tax cut law will add not $1.5 trillion or the revised estimate of $1.7 trillion to our national debt, but about $3 trillion. Add in increased military spending, and the additional debt will soar to nearly $4 trillion–a more than 25% increase from when Trump took office.

“Moreover, if lawmakers changed current law to maintain certain policies now in place—preventing a significant increase in individual income taxes in 2026, for example—the result would be even larger increases in debt,” CBO wrote.

“The prospect of large and growing debt poses substantial risks for the nation and presents policymakers with significant challenges,” CBO reported, noting that “this report’s projections are consistent with the 10-year baseline budget and economic projections that CBO published in the spring of 2018.”

The CBO updates its economic analysis twice a year. Trump’s own projections are rosier, but they assume the economy will grow at about 5% annually, a roughly two-thirds increase over current growth that only economists allied with Trump find credible.

You can expect Faux News and other unreliable news organizations to claim that CBO is anti-Trump and not to be trusted. Fact is, the CBO is nonpartisan. It is also an office of Congress, where Republicans control both the House and Senate. In short, you can trust the CBO is doing its best regardless of who occupies the White House.

Now add rising interest rates into the mix. Last month federal debt carried an average interest expense of 2.41%, up slightly from 2.32% when Obama left office. But Trump has called for higher interest rates and the Federal Reserve is raising the short-term rates it controls with plans for steadily increasing them into next year.

Looked at from the perspective of a Cosmic Observer, Trump is injecting with growth hormones the long-term Washington practice of using subtle budget, tax and regulatory techniques to take from the many and redistribute to the already rich few.

But Trump promised to “drain the swamp” and take care of the “forgotten man.” Trump never said that in office he would use the presidency, as he is, to pick the pockets of those forgotten Americans.